The National Basketball Association and videgame maker Take-Two Interactive are launching a professional videogame league, the first videogame operated by a major U.S. sports league. WSJ‘s Lee Hawkins explains

Former number one welterweight contender and currently promoting boxing in New York and Detroit, co-author Dmitriy Salita uses the book to teach his two beautiful daughters about his sport.

“As a boxer and a father, I see this book as a great way to transmit the boxing vocabulary to the kids through this educational pictorial while teaching them to read?”

Educator Michael Salita says “parents are amazed to see their children acquire reading skills at pre-school age by using our book. There is a great sense of gratification in knowing that mom and dad are responsible for giving their young ones this head start.”

Co-author Bill Caplan, father of 5, grandfather of 9 and great grandfather of 5-year-old Logan says, “our little boy just started kindergarten and he already reads thanks to B IS FOR BOXING. He’s doing really well at school.”

What better gift for a child than the gift of reading can an adult give a child?

B IS FOR BOXING can be purchased at Amazon.com, sentrumbookstore.com/about/, eastview.com and Kalinka and Saint Petersburg Bookstores on Brighton Beach.

With less people playing — and watching the game — Greg Norman is looking to millennials to take golf out of the long grass. CNNMoney’s Maggie Lake caught up with him for a round in New Jersey. CNNMoney video

Doctors in Toronto told ESPN that Mirra had deposits of tau protein in the frontal and temporal lobes of his brain, telltale signs of the neurodegenerative disease that has affected so many athletes in contact sports, most-notably football players.

“I couldn’t tell the difference,” Dr. Lili-Naz Hazrati told ESPN of the comparison between Mirra’s brain and the brains of athletes from other sports who were living with CTE at the time of their deaths. More at nydailynews.com